1977 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am Coupe 2-door 6.6l on 2040-cars
Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States
Let your hair down, close your eyes and imagine you are making a run from Texarakana to Georgia in this 1977 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am with the T-Tops off. This is a rare opportunity for you to own a vehicle that is from an era when Jimmy Carter was president, COORS was the beer to drink, a gallon of gas was 66 cents, and the average price of a home was $54,000. This particular Trans Am is not a museum piece but one that has been beautifully restored to be driven. The previous owner had installed a brand new crate PONTIAC 402 cu in V8, a brand new Turbo 350 Automatic Transmission, a new torque converter, an aftermarket temperature gauge, along with too many other numerous new parts to restore this vehicle to its past glory.
This vehicle is a 8.5 out of 10 in terms of its condition as been assessed by numerous Trans Am enthusiasts. We want people to know that you will be proud to have this vehicle in your garage, part of your collection or driven on the weekends for fun but is not one that is necessarily a museum piece.
This vehicle has all the original Body by Fisher body panels with matching vins. It was produced in Norwood, Ohio on January 22nd, 1977 per the body. This vehicle is also free of Bondo and only has one rust spot on the passenger door the size of a nickel. Otherwise, this vehicle is free of rust throughout the rest of the body. In regards to the mileage, that is what the odometer currently reads but we cannot 100% guarantee it is actual.
We bought this vehicle from a local car collector who had multiple Trans Ams in his garage and was wanting to sell this one as he had his eye on another toy to add to his collection.
To give you an idea of who we are, Pikes Peak Automotive Group is a small used car dealerhsip in Colorado Springs that sells vehicles old to newer. Reputation is extremely important to us so we are trying to be as forth coming as possible with the info we have gathered from the original seller along with information given to us by the many Trans Am collectors and fans that have come and seen the car in person. Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions and we will do our best to answer them.
In regards to shipping, we are willing to ship anywhere at the buyers expense. We will release the vehicle for shipping after we have received certified funds or a wire transfer and the funds have cleared.
We appreciate you spending the time to look at this vehicle and we feel very confident you will be very satisfied with your purchase.
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Burt Reynolds' movie re-creations fetch $379,500 in Vegas
Wed, Oct 3 2018The recent death of Hollywood legend and automotive enthusiast Burt Reynolds helped drive up the value of four of his former cars from the 1970s and '80s, which sold last weekend at Barrett-Jackson's Las Vegas auction for a combined $379,500. Reynolds, who died Sept. 6 at age 82, had offered three Pontiac Trans Ams — two of them re-creations of the cars he drove in "Smokey and the Bandit" and "Hooper" and the third from 1984 used to promote his United States Football League team, the Tampa Bay Bandits. The fourth was a 1978 Chevrolet R30 pickup truck, styled like the one featured in "Cannonball Run." The "Bandit" re-creation, a 1978 Pontiac Firebird Trans Am that Reynolds ordered to be as "movie-correct" as possible but featuring a custom-built 200-4R automatic transmission, sold for $192,500. The car features a freshly built Pontiac 400 cubic-inch V8 mated to a four-speed automatic and featuring all-new Butler Performance parts and air-conditioning components. Reynolds reportedly said this was his favorite car from his films, and it even came with an authentic movie-correct CB radio and CB antenna. The red retro-rocket "Hooper" '78 Firebird, with a 403 cubic-inch V8 and a three-speed automatic, hammered for $88,000. By comparison, a gold 1978 Trans Am also offered at the Las Vegas auction but not connected to Reynolds fetched $27,500. The 1987 Chevy R30 pickup was a re-creation of the Indy Hauler pace truck seen jumping over a moving freight train in "Cannonball Run." It hammered for $49,500. The fourth car never appeared in any of Reynolds' films but is instead the only surviving example of two Trans Ams used to promote the Tampa Bay Bandits of the now-defunct USFL, having been driven out onto the field by Reynolds and his late friend and co-star, Jerry Reed, during opening day one season. It also sold for $49,500. At the Barrett-Jackson Scottsdale Auction in 2016, Reynolds accompanied a 1977 Trans Am used to promote "Bandit" onto the auction block. That car sold for $550,000. Related Video: Featured Gallery Burt Reynolds 2018 Barrett-Jackson Las Vegas Auction Image Credit: Barrett-Jackson Celebrities Chevrolet Pontiac Truck Coupe Performance celebrity pontiac trans am pontiac firebird burt reynolds
Junkyard Gem: 1964 Pontiac Catalina Custom Ventura
Mon, May 22 2023Like Impala, Skylark, Malibu and Silverado (among many others), the Ventura name began its career as the designation for a trim level or option package used on another GM model, then became a model name in its own right. Initially a designation for a snazzed-up Pontiac Catalina two- or four-door hardtop, the Ventura name moved over to a Pontiac-ized version of the Chevy Nova for 1971. Today's Junkyard Gem, found in a Northern California car graveyard, proudly bears both Catalina and Ventura badging. Actually, the Catalina name itself started out as a trim level for the Chieftain and Star Chief models of the 1950s, just to confuse everybody. By the time this car was built, the Catalina was the cheapest of four Pontiac models built on the same full-size B-Body platform as the big Chevrolets and Olds 88s of the time (the Star Chief, Bonneville and Grand Prix ranked above it on the 1964 Pontiac Prestige-O-Meter). The 1964 Catalina four-door hardtop with the Custom Ventura package offered a lot of swank per dollar, with a price starting at $3,063. That's about $29,821 when converted to inflated 2023 dollars. The main benefit of the Custom Ventura package was an interior done up entirely in Morrokide upholstery. Morrokide was the name GM applied to Naugahyde fake leather when used in Pontiac vehicles; when used in Buicks, it was known as Cordaveen, while Oldsmobile Naugahyde was called Morocceen. Naugahyde took its name from the town of Naugatuck, Connecticut, where it was invented. This car's Morrokide is in rough shape. In fact, everything about this car is decayed and probably infectious. You know to be careful when a junkyard car has warnings about rat feces inked on the glass. That said, I couldn't resist examining the 8-track tapes that littered the interior. Here's Hotel California, the 1976 hit album by the Eagles. Supertramp's Paris, a live album recorded from the 1979 Breakfast in America tour, is here as well. Here's The Best of Carly Simon, from 1975. The tapes were played on this Sparkomatic player, which probably lived in the glovebox or under the seat. The factory radio was AM-only, and includes the frequency markings for the atomic-attack CONELRAD emergency frequencies. 1964 was the last year for mandatory CONELRAD radios in the United States.
This Auto Aerobics car art ties our brains in knots like pretzels
Sat, 14 Dec 2013We like cars, and we like art. Naturally, Chris Labrooy's Auto Aerobics series - computer-generated images of some seriously contorted 1968 Pontiac Bonnevilles floating in mid-air - instantly clicked with us. If the Pontiacs weren't floating or hollow, we could be fooled into believing the image is real. But where's the fun in that?
Check out the gallery we included of Labrooy's Bonneville art, and feel free too head over to his website for some Formula One humor.